Cinnamon-Sugar Focaccia (No-Knead, No-Fuss)
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When focaccia meets cinnamon roll, good things happen. In this union, focaccia dough gets folded and dimpled with a cinnamon-brown sugar-butter mixture and baked until bubbly and golden all around. Cinnamon rolls without all the fuss? Yes. You. Can 🎉

Assembling cinnamon rolls always feels like a process, from making the dough and rolling it out, to spreading on the filling and coiling it up, to slicing, baking, and making the glaze.
Cinnamon roll focaccia feels effortless in comparison. As you know, focaccia dough, made with 4 ingredients, takes no time to stir together, and it can hang out in your fridge for days.
Moreover, with cinnamon roll focaccia, there’s no rolling and coiling — you’ll fold and dimple the dough, but all of this takes place in the confines of the 9×13-inch pan you’ll bake the focaccia in. You won’t flour a work surface or your hands, you won’t coil or cut. Overall, it’s very simple.
This would be the perfect thing to make for a fall or winter brunch, when you need something sweet to feed a crowd but maybe don’t have the energy for a more elaborate ensemble. Find step-by-step instructions below.
Cinnamon-Sugar Focaccia, Step by Step
First, gather your ingredients:

Whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast, then…

…add the water:

And stir with a spatula until you have a sticky dough ball:

Cover the bowl and let rest for 30 minutes, then stretch and fold it. Video guidance:
Slick the dough with oil, cover the bowl, then stick in the fridge for at least 12 hours or as long as 3 days.

Remove from the fridge and take a moment to marvel at its beauty:

Then deflate it with a flexible bench scraper.

Prepare your pan:

Turn the dough into the pan, and turn it in the oil to coat.

Don’t touch it for 1.5 hours:

Then stretch it to fit the pan:

In a small saucepan over low heat, combine some butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon:

Whisk until smooth…

… then pour over the dough, distributing it as evenly as possible:

Spread the cinnamon-sugar mixture over the dough, then fold the dough envelope-style, and turn it so that the open ends of the envelope face the short ends of the pan:

Cover the pan, and let it rest for another 1.5 hours or return to the fridge for another 24 hours (see notes below):

Then mix another batch of the cinnamon sugar butter mixture over the dough and dimple, distributing the mixture as your dimple:

Sprinkle with sea salt, then transfer to the oven…

… and bake until evenly golden:

Transfer the focaccia to a cooling rack:

Let cool briefly, while you mix up a simple glaze:

Then transfer the focaccia to a serving board, and drizzle the glaze over the top:


Cut into squares and serve:

Make It Ahead
If you want to reduce the amount of work on the morning you want to serve this, you can make the recipe through step 8, but after you cover the pan, you’ll return it to the fridge. You can use plastic wrap or a zip-top bag. I love these 2-gallon bags for this purpose:

Remove it one hour before you plan on baking it and let it rise at room temperature (covered):

Then proceed with the recipe, dimpling and spreading over the final layer of the brown sugar-cinnamon-butter mixture. Note: as you dimple, you will feel the cold inside layer of the initial brown sugar-cinnamon-butter mixture — it will feel slightly solidified… don’t worry, it will be fine.

Bake as directed:

Glaze as directed:

Cut and enjoy the deliciousness:

Cinnamon-Sugar Focaccia (No-Knead, No-Fuss)
- Total Time: 5 hours
- Yield: 12 to 18 pieces 1x
Description
When focaccia meets cinnamon roll, good things happen. In this union, focaccia dough gets folded and dimpled with a cinnamon-brown sugar-butter mixture and baked until bubbly and golden all around. Cinnamon rolls without all the fuss? Yes. You. Can 🎉
In sum, this is this overnight focaccia recipe folded with a cinnamon-sugar-butter layer inspired by @_lacebakes
Notes:
- As always, for best results, use a digital scale to measure the flour and water.
- Flour: If you live in a humid environment, I would suggest using bread flour. If you are in Canada or the UK, also consider using bread flour or consider holding back some of the water — reference the video for how the texture of the bread should look; then add water as needed.
- Salt: The rule of thumb with bread dough is that the weight of the salt should be 2 to 3% the weight of the flour. For this recipe, that is 10 to 15 grams. If you are sensitive to salt, use 1o grams. If you are not, use 12 to 15 grams salt. I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt.
- Yeast: I love SAF instant yeast. I buy it in bulk, transfer it to a quart storage container, and store it in my fridge for months. You can store it in the freezer also. If you are using active-dry yeast, simply sprinkle the yeast over the lukewarm water and let it stand for 15 minutes or until it gets foamy; then proceed with the recipe.
- The Pan: I love this 9×13-inch USA pan for focaccia.
- Adapting the recipe for sourdough: Make this sourdough focaccia through step 5, then proceed with the recipe here, picking up at step 5, letting the dough proof for 1.5 hours in the pan before proceeding with the recipe.
Timing:
- Plan ahead: Ideally, the mixed dough spends a day or two in the fridge — this creates an especially bubbly-textured focaccia. Once the dough is removed from the fridge, you can take one of two paths:
- Make the recipe through step 8, but return the pan to the fridge for another day. Here’s a rough schedule of what that would look like:
- Wednesday or Thursday: Mix dough, stick it in the fridge.
- Friday: When you have time, remove the dough, let it proof for 1.5 hours in the pan, layer it and shape as directed, then return it to the fridge (covered).
- Saturday: Remove the pan from the fridge 1 hour before you want to bake it.
- Let the dough rest for 1.5 hours, then proceed with the recipe. With this method, you’ll be baking the focaccia roughly 4 hours after you remove the dough from the fridge. So, if you wanted to serve this for a 10 or 11 am brunch, you would want to remove the dough from the fridge around 6 or 7 am.
- Make the recipe through step 8, but return the pan to the fridge for another day. Here’s a rough schedule of what that would look like:
- If you are short on time and want to make this start to finish in one day: Use lukewarm water and let the mixed dough rise at room temperature until doubled, about 1.5 to 2 hours. Then proceed with the recipe as written.
Ingredients
For the dough:
- 4 cups (512 g) bread or all-purpose flour, see notes above
- 2 to 3 teaspoons (10 to 15 grams) kosher salt, see notes above
- 2 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast, see notes above if using active dry
- 2 cups (455 g) cold or room temperature water
- olive oil
- Softened butter, for the pan
For the cinnamon-sugar mixture:
- ½ cup (113 grams) butter, salted or unsalted butter, divided
- ½ cup (100 grams) brown sugar, divided
- 4 teaspoons cinnamon, divided
- flaky sea salt, such as Maldon
For the glaze:
- 1 cup (113 grams) confectioners’ sugar
- 2 tablespoons (28 grams) milk or heavy cream
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Make the dough: In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast. Add the water. Using a rubber spatula, mix until the liquid is absorbed and the ingredients form a sticky dough ball. Cover the bowl and let it rest for 30 minutes.
- Stretch and fold the dough: Fill a small bowl with water. Using a wet hand, stretch and fold the dough by grabbing an edge and pulling it up and towards the center. Repeat this stretching and folding process, 8 to 10 times, moving your hand around the edge of the dough with every set of stretches and folds. As you stretch and fold, you should feel the dough transform from being sticky and shaggy to smooth and cohesive. Find video guidance in the post above as well as here.
- Let it rise: Rub the surface of the dough lightly with olive oil. Cover the bowl with a lid or plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator immediately for at least 12 hours or for as long as three days. (See notes above if you need to skip the overnight rise for time purposes.)
- Prepare the pan: Grease a 9×13-inch pan with softened butter. (Note: This greasing step may seem excessive, but with some pans, it is imperative to do so to prevent sticking. With my USA pans, I can get away with olive oil alone; with my glass baking dishes, butter is a must.) Pour 2 tablespoons of oil into the pan.
- Deflate the dough: Using a flexible bench scraper or a lightly oiled hand, deflate the dough by releasing it from the sides of the bowl and pulling it toward the center. Rotate the bowl in quarter turns as you deflate, turning the mass into a rough ball. Turn the dough out into the olive oil in the prepared pan. Turn the dough several times in the oil to ensure it is completely coated. Let the dough rest for 1.5 hours. Cover the pan. (I use a cutting board or sheet pan.)
- Prepare the filling: In a small skillet, melt 4 tablespoons of the butter. Whisk in 4 tablespoons of the brown sugar, 2 teaspoons of the cinnamon, and a pinch of flaky sea salt. Remove from the heat and let cool briefly.
- Stretch the dough: Using lightly oiled hands, gently dimple the dough, stretching it to fit the pan. Pour the brown sugar filling as evenly over the top of the dough as possible, and use your hands to distribute it over the surface. Reserve the skillet.
- Fold the dough: Starting with a short end, fold the dough envelope style: if, for example, you are starting with the right edge, fold it to the left covering two-thirds of the dough, then fold the left edge over to the right to cover (and vice versa if starting with the left edge). Then turn the bundle of dough so that the open ends face the short ends of the pan. Video guidance here. Cover the pan and let the dough rest for another 1.5 hours. (Note: At this point, you can tuck the entire pan into a 2-gallon ziptop bag or cover with plastic wrap and return it to the fridge for another day. Remove it one hour before you plan on baking it, the proceed with the recipe.)
- Preheat the oven to 425ºF.
- Prepare the remaining filling: In the same small skillet, melt the remaining 4 tablespoons of butter. Whisk in the remaining 4 tablespoons of brown sugar, remaining 2 teaspoons of cinnamon, and a pinch of flaky sea salt. Remove from the heat and let cool briefly.
- Dimple the dough: Uncover the pan, pour the filling over the surface of the dough, and rub with your hands to distribute it evenly. Using lightly oiled hands, gently dimple the dough, creating bubbles and craters as you do. Sprinkle lightly with sea salt.
- Bake the dough: Transfer the pan to the oven and bake for 25 minutes or until the focaccia is evenly browned. Remove the pan from the oven, let the focaccia cool in the pan briefly (2 to 3 minutes), then run a spatula around the edges of the pan, and transfer the focaccia to a cooling rack to cool for 5 minutes.
- Make the glaze: In a small bowl or liquid measure, whisk together the confectioners’ sugar, milk, and vanilla.
- Finish the focaccia: Transfer the focaccia to a serving board. Drizzle the glaze over the top. Using a serrated knife, cut the focaccia into pieces (or more) and serve.
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 25 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
171 Comments on “Cinnamon-Sugar Focaccia (No-Knead, No-Fuss)”
Baked this today and it was fantastic! Mixed the dough on Thursday and placed it in the fridge overnight. On Friday, I didn’t want to bake it late, so I opted for the optional second overnight in the fridge after adding the first layer of cinnamon-sugar mix. Added the last layer of cinnamon-sugar in the morning and then baked. I followed the icing recipe to the letter but found that with heavy cream (we had it on hand for change) the consistency was too thick, so I added some milk to thin it out and it was perfect! 10/10 will definitely make this again!
Awww, Brian I’m so happy to hear this! And so happy to hear from you! It has been too long, and I feel terrible bc I think I never followed up about a dough question regarding the pan pizza dough that may have been a little problematic… I’m sorry. I’ve been terrible on IG recently… better here or email. Hope all is well! Thanks for writing 🙂
The instructions were easy to follow and the results were delicious!!
Great to hear, Beth! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I made this using your sourdough modifications and it was absolutely amazing! I will definitely be making this again over the holiday season. So much easier and dare I say tastier than cinnamon rolls!
So nice to hear this, Ali! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. And I know: SO much easier than cinnamon rolls 🙂 🙂 🙂
I would like to add raisins but don’t want to affect the proofing of the dough. When would you suggest I add them in the process?
I think you could add them right in the beginning with the flour — toss them in with the dry ingredients.
This was absolutely amazing. Your recipes never fail me, and this was probably one of the most ridiculous (in the best way) desserts that I’ve ever made. We loved it! Even my husband, who is not much of a dessert guy, wanted seconds! 😄
So nice to read this, Tara! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
Better than Cinnamon rolls!! I love the texture and flavors of this simple recipe. Instructions were easy to follow, and the videos are a nice touch! I made it for the first time today, and I already have requests for this to be part of Thanksgiving weekend!
So nice to read this, Cheryl! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. I can’t believe it’s already time to start preparing for Thanksgiving!! Turkey legs are on my grocery list this week… it’s stock-making time!
I added chopped pecans to the sugarmix.. delicious!! Gonna make it again (and again and again)!
Great to hear, Johanna! Thanks for writing and sharing this 🙂
This is such a delicious treat. I have made it twice. Both times, I used half the dough for savory focaccia to go with dinner and followed the recipe as written for the other half of dough. I halved the filling ingredients. Honestly, I like this better than a cinnamon roll. The texture is just so so good. Planning to make this for the holiday mornings this year. Thank you for such a great recipe – again!
Great to hear, Valancy! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. Love that you were able to get two recipes out of one dough 🙂
I love the sourdough focaccia and was thinking about adapting it and making this. Any advice would he greatly appreciated 😊
Great to hear 🙂 I would make the sourdough through the bulk fermentation, then return here and pick up the recipe at step 5.
Would you recommend storing this at room temp or in the fridge (after it’s been baked and glazed)?
Room temp! In a ziptop bag. I love these two-gallon sized bags for storing larger loaves of bread.
Fabulous! Making for the second time today. The first time I split the dough and made ½ rosemary focaccia, and 1/2 cinnamon focaccia. We ate ¾ of the cinnamon one right away, froze the little that was left and ate it the next evening…it was even better after the short time in the freezer. This batch will all be cinnamon! I love making it in two pie plates. Thank you Alexandra!
So nice to read this, Terrill!! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. Great to hear that the brief time in the freezer only improved the product! Happy baking 🙂
I tried a few focaccia recipes before this one and they just did not work. This recipe was my last ditch attempt and it didn’t fail. I feel like this dough is very forgiving, but Beware, you will want to eat the whole thing!! It’s delicious. This recipe is now a firm favourite in my recipe book.
Thank you 💕
Great to hear, Hannah! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of this 🙂
Oh My Gosh, this focaccia is one of the best things I have ever made! Our grandkids went nuts for it and I ended up giving most of it to them to take home. I believe that USA pan has a lot to do with how beautifully the crust turned out with the olive oil in the bottom of the pan. I will be making this for Thanksgiving for certain.
I did shorten the time down to about 24 hours and it still worked. Mixed up the dough at 8:00am Sat morning and put in the fridge, added the cinnamon mixture in the evening, put back in the fridge in the pan, took it out Sunday morning at 9:00, let it rise until about 10:30, added the last cinnamon mixture and baked it at 11:00 for Sunday brunch. So, so good!
Amazing! So nice to read all of this, Lisa. Thanks so much for writing and sharing your timeline… so helpful for others. Glad your grandkids approved 🙂
I should not have made this because no person needs to eat a 9x-13 of bread, especially with thanksgiving right around the corner. I followed the instructions pretty closely and yielded great results: excellent crispy crust with a. Bubbly top and inside. I might add a little more cinnamon next time, but h like a very strong cinnamon flavor in cinnamon rolls. The slight savoriness from the bit of olive oil is really delicious. It’s a little involved timing out your rises and folds, but worth the effort!
Great to hear, Elizabeth! (And I hear you 🤣🤣🤣🤣).
Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes/experience.
I’ve made this several times and it’s amazing as is!! However, was wondering if you can incorporate pumpkin somehow to make it even more special for thanksgiving breakfast table!?
Maybe you have a recipe for a pumpkin focaccia?
Hi Kat! I love this idea, but I don’t know how to advise because I’ve never tried incorporating pumpkin into this dough. I have made a yeasted pumpkin loaf, however, using the remaining pumpkin puree from these muffins. You could use that recipe as a guide. What I do note in that pumpkin bread recipe in the google doc is that I don’t find the pumpkin actually lends that much flavor — it tinges the dough a beautiful hue and its presence creates a wonderful texture, but the pumpkin flavor is nearly indiscernible.
Hi Ali,
Thank you for this recipe! Can it be made with sourdough starter?
Thanks again,
Christina
Hi! And yes. You’d essentially follow this recipe for the dough: Simple Sourdough Focaccia: A Beginner’s Guide. Then return to this recipe after the bulk fermentation.
Hi! I’m making this for a Friendsgiving at 6:30. If I were to bake this at 4:00, would you recommend reheating it? When would you suggest putting the glaze on? I’m unsure if the glaze consistency will be weird if we aren’t eating it right away. Thank you!! Super excited to try this.
Hi! I don’t think you’ll need to reheat it. I would put the glaze on right before serving, but honestly, it’s fine fine either way (drizzled on freshly baked or drizzled on later).
Hey Ali,
A bit confused on timeline for the cinnamon focaccia bread when making ahead. Directions say take out of refrigerator 1 hr before wanting to bake, but then says with this method plan on baking 4 hrs after taking out of refrigerator ? Can you clear this up for me please and thank you. I do love your recipes so much.
Hi! There are two ways to make the recipe. Here’s the first:
1. Mix the dough, stick it in the fridge for 12 to 72 hours.
2. Remove the dough from the fridge and proceed with the recipe fully. With this method, you’ll want to plan for 4 hours from removing the dough and baking.
Method two:
1. Mix the dough, stick it in the fridge for 12-72 hours.
2. Remove the dough from the fridge and proceed with the recipe through step 8. This will take roughly 3 hours. Return the pan to the fridge for up to 24 hours.
3. Remove from the fridge 1 hour before you plan on baking.
Let me know if that clarifies! The second method is helpful for when you want to serve this for a breakfast, but don’t want to get up 4 hours ahead of time and don’t want to have to do a lot of work on the morning you plan on serving it. It does call for planning farther ahead of time.
If I did the first overnight rise in the refrigerator, then did the second rise on the counter before adding the cinnamon mixture and folding, the following morning, have you ever just put directly in the oven rather than the additional hour to come up to room temperature? I want to serve this for breakfast tomorrow but don’t really have the extra hour to spare before baking. Any thoughts? But the way, I have made rosemary and black olive focaccia multiple times, have decorated with vegetables for a floral scene, following your awesome video for the dough, and everyone has LOVED it any time I have made.
Great to read all of this, Jennifer! Sorry for the delay here! What did you end up doing? I have not experimented with placing the focaccia directly in the oven, skipping the one-hour room temperature rise. It might be fine, but I’d hate for you to have gone through all that work for it to not bake properly.
I am so excited to try this!! I’ve been making your sourdough focaccia for years and it’s definitely my favorite bread.
Question – I’m planning to make this for a teacher breakfast that starts very early… like too early to bake it in the morning I think. How do you think it would be if I baked it the night before and just iced it in the morning?
I think it will be delicious! My kids eat this 2 to 3 days after it is baked. It’s of course best freshly baked, but it does stay moist for days, and I think icing in the morning will give it a freshness. Go for it 🙂
I made your rosemary focaccia last night and now I want to make this cinnamon version. Can I bake in a cast iron or would it take too long to come to temp in the oven?
Cast iron works beautifully for focaccias of all kinds. Go for it!
Any idea whether I could freeze the unbaked dough? And if so, when would you recommend? Headed to a homemakers swap later this week. We love your focaccia but thought I might mix it up and make some cinnamon too!
Hi! I would suggest mixing the dough, letting it rise at room temperature for 1.5-2 hours or until it nearly doubles. Deflate it, ball it up; then freeze.
Has anyone made this gluten free? I’m thinking about making it gluten free for Christmas.
sister, this is genius. girl meets rye here… i am going to alter this for sourdough this week. thank you! xo
Awww hello! I’m sure your sourdough version will be lovely 🙂
I made this cinnamon version for a Christmas party. Everyone absolutely loved them! Now I need to make more for my family. This fococcia recipe is so easy and comes out perfect every time
Great to hear, Jacqueline! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
This is a fabulous recipe Ali, thank you! So easy to make and far better than any cinnamon bun I’ve ever eaten.
Great to hear, Sophia! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I have made this weekly since you posted it. I’ve done the quick same day version and the 3 day fridge version. Turns out amazing every time. The only change I made is to do the cinnamon sugar mixture all at once instead of 2 batches. I’m too impatient to do it twice. I put the mixture in a measuring cup and pour half for the filling and then the other half for the topping.
Great to read this, Susan! I totally understand doing the filling all at once… I have a hard time eye-balling half, which is why I do it twice, but I like your streamlined version. Will try. Happy Holidays!
This was such an amazing recipe. Followed the recipe exactly and everyone loved it.
Great to hear, Brie! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
My brown sugar cinnamon mixture seized – the butter stayed melted and the sugar got hard… any idea why that may have happened? I still ended up putting it in the dough but I have no idea how it will turn out when I bake it!
Hi Sally! So sorry for the delay here… did end up baking OK? Was the brown sugar anyway different? What was the brand? I’m perplexed.
According to Google I let the sugar mixture get too hot and it crystallized! It still turned out ok!
OK, great to hear! Thanks for circling back 🙂
This was so fun to make. Dough was made Monday before Christmas, 1st mixture and fold Wednesday morning, with 2nd mixture and bake Christmas morning. The bubbles were *chefs kiss* beautiful!!! I made this for my son in-law and so many recipes were complicated, I make your rosemary bread all the time, and was excited to find this recipe on your site! Love love Ali, thank you! And Merry Christmas!
Awww, so nice to read all of this, Theresa! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. There’s nothing like those focaccia bubbles 🙂 Happy happy holidays to you and your family!
Merry Christmas Allí! I just wanted to mention that I baked my cinnamon roll focaccia in my oven for 25 minutes and it was really too dark in the areas where it bubbled up. I’m sure it’s because of the cinnamon in the recipe, my regular focaccia does not get that dark. Next time I will tent it at probably around 20 minutes with foil to see if that helps. I’m sure it’s still going to be delicious and it looks beautiful with the icing on it! All the best for a happy and healthy new year! Thank you for all the beautiful recipes. 🥳🎄
Bummer about the bubbles getting too dark! But thank you for writing and sharing this. Next time, I would lower the temperature by 25ºF and keep an eye on it. Glad it looked beautiful nonetheless. Happy holidays to you and your family, Lisa!